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Prepositions after Adjectives
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faithful to, in, of, with or for?

  • Faithful to Christ's commandment.
  • No one was faithful in the 70's.
  • Faithful of Kundapur deanery gathered in big number.
  • We had a band of faithful with us.
more...

familiar with, to, from or in?

  • I am quite familiar with the process.
  • This situation is familiar To me.
  • The principle here is familiar from biology.
  • Sounds familiar in this crisis.
more...

famous for, in, of, by or as?

  • Famous for their mass migrations.
  • Q: Are you more famous in the U.
  • The rich and famous of the day.
  • They sang Nobody Knows, made famous by JLS.
more...

"fantastic for" or "fantastic in"?

  • But it's been fantastic for me.
  • It was fantastic in early labour.
  • The set is fantastic with gaming.
  • Harry isn't fantastic at sharing.
more...

"favorable to" or "favorable for"?

  • False testimony favorable to the defendants.
  • It's not favorable for injuries.
  • Former PM is indeed favorable in opinion polls.
  • But Fate was not at all favorable towards the bell.
more...

fearful of, about, for, in or as?

  • Our Indians are fearful of Pakistan.
  • People are fearful about losing their jobs.
  • We are very fearful for America.
  • Dealing with cancer can be fearful in itself.
more...

"fine with" or "fine for"?

  • Fine with them but not with me.
  • I was then fine for four years.
  • A conviction and fine of $5,000.
  • Always boots fine in safe mode.
more...

fit for, with, in, into or to?

  • Fit for dinner with friends, no.
  • Good fit with corporate culture.
  • They are not fit in this party.
  • I could def not fit into it though.
more...

"flexible in" or "flexible with"?

  • Be flexible in your expectations.
  • Be flexible with your schedule.
  • Be flexible about how they may return.
  • I tried to be flexible for his sake.
more...

fluent in, with or at?

  • Fluent in French is an advantage.
  • A baby is absolutely fluent with emotions.
  • Young Sergei was fluent at French, German and English.
more...

following in, on, to, about or from?

  • Put the following in a blender.
  • Look for the following on the shelves.
  • Commit the following to memory.
  • He says the following about Jesus.
more...

fond of?

  • Not fond of the episodes though.
more...

foreign to, in, as, for or about?

  • Mercy is foreign to the idealist.
  • English is not foreign in Ireland.
  • The experience was foreign as well as incredibly authentic.
  • Neither science or philosophy nor medicine are foreign for me.
more...

fraught with or in?

  • A day fraught with new dangers.
  • The deal was fraught in so many ways.
more...

"free of" or "free from"?

  • Both events are free of charge.
  • We are then made free from sin.
  • And that makes it FREE for you.
  • And free to what? Free to obey.
more...

"fresh from" or "fresh in"?

  • The milk was fresh from the cows.
  • She was cool and fresh in the hot night.
  • That's fresh out of school low.
  • The novel is fresh off the press.
more...

"friendly with" or "friendly to"?

  • The people are friendly with it.
  • The enemy is not friendly to you.
  • I arranged a friendly against the reserves.
  • People are very friendly in NZ.
more...

"frustrating for", "frustrating at" or "frustrating to"?

  • It was frustrating for all of us.
  • This is frustrating to the accuser.
  • It can be frustrating at times.
  • And it's frustrating in the extreme.
more...

full of, on, for, in or to?

  • The air seemed full of mystery.
  • Full on air-instrument assault.
  • Chapel was full for every meeting.
  • She struck him full in the face.
more...

fundamental to, in, of, for or about?

  • Fundamental to Canada's honour.
  • This has been fundamental in my work.
  • This is a fundamental of a Fluid Society.
  • That is fundamental for everybody.
more...

"funny in", "funny about" or "funny to"?

  • You are too funny in this post.
  • And everything is funny to you.
  • I'd not being funny about that.
  • That's what made it funny for me.
more...